From: Richard Bonner on
~misfit~ (sore_n_happy(a)nospamyahoo.com.au) wrote:
> I have a friend who is the IT guy for a company. Recently he was tasked with
> disposing of several EOL (for them) laptops and company policy for them is
> to remove and destroy (big hammer...) the HDDs and then pass on the rest of
> the machine to the IT reseller company which the always deal with.

(Snip)

> However, when I dropped them in a USB dock and went to run my HDD scrubbing
> / over-writing software I got a message that the HDD was password protected.
(Snip)

> Can anybody help me in my quest to keep perfectly good HDDs out of the
> landfill and do my bit for reducing needless waste?
> --
> Shaun.

*** If you know a repair tech, have him load a bootable DOS service disc
into the CD/DVD drive or on to a flashdrive if the USB port is bootable.
See if it can do the partitioning. I suggest Ranish because it can
recognise Windows' (among others) partitions.

However, if the laptop itself is password protected and no removable
media will boot, then you might try removing the CMOS battery and waiting
for the laptop to forget what it is. Be aware that there may be dangers
with this method given the relative newness of the laptop. Of course after
you reinstall the battery, you will have to tell the CMOS about the laptop
and reissue any non-default changes you want.

Finally, you might take it to your IT friend, get him to boot and
unlock the machine with his password and then to hand it to you. At that
point, you can wipe the system. Seeing it done in front of him will be a
demonstration that you are being true to your word about not accessing
company data.

--
Richard Bonner
http://www.chebucto.ca/~ak621/DOS/
From: ~misfit~ on
Somewhere on teh intarwebs gargoyle60 wrote:
> On Thu, 1 Jul 2010 11:46:55 +1200, "~misfit~"
> <sore_n_happy(a)nospamyahoo.com.au> wrote:
>
>> I have a friend who is the IT guy for a company. Recently he was
>> tasked with disposing of several EOL (for them) laptops and company
>> policy for them is to remove and destroy (big hammer...) the HDDs
>> and then pass on the rest of the machine to the IT reseller company
>> which the always deal with.
>>
>> I couldn't bear to see / hear about good HDDs being smashed so I
>> gave him my word (which is indeed my bond, he's known me long enough
>> to know that's true) that the data wouldn't be accessed at all, just
>> wiped. So I became the proud owner of five second-hand Toshiba 120GB
>> 5400rpm SATA HDDs. (Model MK1252GSX)
>>
>> However, when I dropped them in a USB dock and went to run my HDD
>> scrubbing / over-writing software I got a message that the HDD was
>> password protected. They all are. (I get a similar message when I
>> put them in my ThinkPad HDD ultrabay only from the ThinkPad BIOS.)
>> I've Googled but have so far been unable to resolve the issue. It
>> seems that I may have to destroy them after all. That goes against
>> everything that I believe in. :-(
>>
>> Can anybody help me in my quest to keep perfectly good HDDs out of
>> the landfill and do my bit for reducing needless waste?
>>
>> TYVMIA,
>
> Don't know if this would work...
> but have you tried using something such as GParted to repartition the
> drives - I don't know how it works but I wonder if it might ignore
> passwords as it's going to destroy the partitions (and their data,
> including passwords) anyway? Just a thought

Wow! I forgot about this thread.

Uhhh, the drives aren't available to the BIOS even until the password is
entered so I doubt that GParted would even get as far as seeing partitions.

Thanks though.
--
Shaun.

"Let food be thy medicine" Hippocrates.


From: ~misfit~ on
Somewhere on teh intarwebs spamme0 wrote:
> ~misfit~ wrote:
>> I have a friend who is the IT guy for a company. Recently he was
>> tasked with disposing of several EOL (for them) laptops and company
>> policy for them is to remove and destroy (big hammer...) the HDDs
>> and then pass on the rest of the machine to the IT reseller company
>> which the always deal with. I couldn't bear to see / hear about good HDDs
>> being smashed so I
>> gave him my word (which is indeed my bond, he's known me long enough
>> to know that's true) that the data wouldn't be accessed at all, just
>> wiped. So I became the proud owner of five second-hand Toshiba 120GB
>> 5400rpm SATA HDDs. (Model MK1252GSX)
>>
>> However, when I dropped them in a USB dock and went to run my HDD
>> scrubbing / over-writing software I got a message that the HDD was
>> password protected. They all are. (I get a similar message when I
>> put them in my ThinkPad HDD ultrabay only from the ThinkPad BIOS.)
>> I've Googled but have so far been unable to resolve the issue. It
>> seems that I may have to destroy them after all. That goes against
>> everything that I believe in. :-( Can anybody help me in my quest to keep
>> perfectly good HDDs out of
>> the landfill and do my bit for reducing needless waste?
>>
>> TYVMIA,
> You're gonna have to go back to your friend and get the passwords.
> They may all be the same.
> Be aware that violating company security policy can get your friend
> fired.

Yeah, we know that. He doesn't know the password (he's relatively new) and
isn't about to ask....
--
Cheers,
Shaun.

"Let food be thy medicine" Hippocrates.


From: ~misfit~ on
Somewhere on teh intarwebs ED wrote:
> "~misfit~" <sore_n_happy(a)nospamyahoo.com.au> wrote in message
> news:i0gl1k$rqn$1(a)news.eternal-september.org...
>> I have a friend who is the IT guy for a company. Recently he was
>> tasked with disposing of several EOL (for them) laptops and company
>> policy for them is to remove and destroy (big hammer...) the HDDs
>> and then pass on the rest of the machine to the IT reseller company
>> which the always deal with. I couldn't bear to see / hear about good HDDs
>> being smashed so I
>> gave him my word (which is indeed my bond, he's known me long enough
>> to know that's true) that the data wouldn't be accessed at all, just
>> wiped. So I became the proud owner of five second-hand Toshiba 120GB
>> 5400rpm SATA HDDs. (Model MK1252GSX)
>>
>> However, when I dropped them in a USB dock and went to run my HDD
>> scrubbing / over-writing software I got a message that the HDD was
>> password protected. They all are. (I get a similar message when I
>> put them in my ThinkPad HDD ultrabay only from the ThinkPad BIOS.)
>> I've Googled but have so far been unable to resolve the issue. It
>> seems that I may have to destroy them after all. That goes against
>> everything that I believe in. :-(
>>
>> Can anybody help me in my quest to keep perfectly good HDDs out of
>> the landfill and do my bit for reducing needless waste?
>>
>> TYVMIA,
>> --
>> Shaun.
>>
>> "When we dream.... that's just our brains defragmenting" G Jackson.
>>
> www.WindowsPasswordsRecovery.com

It's not a windows password, I can get past one of those in about as many
minutes as the computer takes to boot.

It's a HDD-firmware password. The HDD simply isn't available to a controller
until the password is given. OR maybe a generic, or a crack.....
--
Shaun.

"Let food be thy medicine" Hippocrates.


From: ~misfit~ on
Somewhere on teh intarwebs Mike S. wrote:
> In article <i0gl1k$rqn$1(a)news.eternal-september.org>,
> ~misfit~ <sore_n_happy(a)nospamyahoo.com.au> wrote:
>> I have a friend who is the IT guy for a company. Recently he was
>> tasked with disposing of several EOL (for them) laptops and company
>> policy for them is to remove and destroy (big hammer...) the HDDs
>> and then pass on the rest of the machine to the IT reseller company
>> which the always deal with.
>>
>> I couldn't bear to see / hear about good HDDs being smashed so I
>> gave him my word (which is indeed my bond, he's known me long enough
>> to know that's true) that the data wouldn't be accessed at all, just
>> wiped. So I became the proud owner of five second-hand Toshiba 120GB
>> 5400rpm SATA HDDs. (Model MK1252GSX)
>>
>> However, when I dropped them in a USB dock and went to run my HDD
>> scrubbing / over-writing software I got a message that the HDD was
>> password protected. They all are. (I get a similar message when I
>> put them in my ThinkPad HDD ultrabay only from the ThinkPad BIOS.)
>> I've Googled but have so far been unable to resolve the issue. It
>> seems that I may have to destroy them after all. That goes against
>> everything that I believe in. :-(
>>
>> Can anybody help me in my quest to keep perfectly good HDDs out of
>> the landfill and do my bit for reducing needless waste?
>
> http://www.rockbox.org/lock.html

Thanks. Been there (well, at least been to where it ends up <g>). No luck.
:-(
--
Shaun.

"Let food be thy medicine" Hippocrates.